Munro Leaf Papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Finding Aid Prepared by Caitlin Goodman

Munro Leaf Papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Finding Aid Prepared by Caitlin Goodman

Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Finding aid prepared by Caitlin Goodman This finding aid was produced using the Archivists' Toolkit September 14, 2016 Describing Archives: A Content Standard Free Library of Philadelphia: Rare Book Department Philadelphia, PA, 19103 Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Table of Contents Summary Information ................................................................................................................................. 3 Biographical/Historical note.......................................................................................................................... 5 Scope and Contents note............................................................................................................................... 6 Arrangement note...........................................................................................................................................6 Administrative Information .........................................................................................................................7 Related Materials ........................................................................................................................................ 7 Controlled Access Headings..........................................................................................................................8 Collection Inventory.................................................................................................................................... 10 Articles, essays, and speeches...............................................................................................................10 Book manuscripts and illustrations....................................................................................................... 11 Clippings, reprints, and scrapbook........................................................................................................39 Correspondence......................................................................................................................................41 Promotional materials, photographs, recordings, and ephemera...........................................................42 Published volumes................................................................................................................................. 45 U.S. Army and Foreign Service work...................................................................................................56 - Page 2 - Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Summary Information Repository Free Library of Philadelphia: Rare Book Department Creator Leaf, Munro, 1905-1976 Title Munro Leaf papers Date [inclusive] 1918-1986 Extent 15.46 Linear feet Language English Language of Materials note Materials are primarily in English with some international news clippings in Arabic, Chinese, German, Japanese, Malay, Polish, Russian, and Turkish. Abstract This collection contains the literary papers of author and illustrator Munro Leaf (1905-1976), with materials dating from 1918 to 1986. Manuscript drafts and illustrations from fifty-eight titles are represented (including fourteen titles produced as part of his work for the US Army and the Foreign Service). In addition to graphite and pen and ink illustrations and manuscript drafts, the collection includes audiovisual materials, clippings, correspondence, dummies, ephemera, photographs, promotional materials, proofs, published volumes, and a scrapbook. Of particular note: the original manuscript for The Story of Ferdinand (1936) as well as a sizeable collection of materials related to the book and its many adaptations; both published and unpublished art and drafts for the Can Be Fun series; and a large quantity of materials related to Munro Leaf’s Watchbirds, serialized in Ladies Home Journal and published in six compilations. - Page 3 - Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Preferred Citation note [Description and date of item], [Box and folder number], Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986, Free Library of Philadelphia, Rare Book Department. - Page 4 - Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Biographical/Historical note Munro Leaf was born in Hamilton, Maryland on December 4, 1905, and grew up in Washington, D.C. After receiving his B.A. from the University of Maryland and M.A. from Harvard University, Leaf first worked as an English teacher (including a stint at the Montgomery School, which was at that time a boys prep school in Wynnewood) before moving to New York City with his wife, Margaret, in 1932. His first city job was as a manuscript reader at Bobbs-Merrill, but within the year he had moved to the F.A. Stokes Company where he remained an editor and a director until leaving to write full-time in 1939. Leaf’s first book, Grammar Can Be Fun, was the first in a long series of “Can Be Fun” books written and illustrated by Leaf. It was published by Stokes in 1934 and included his “scratchy pencil indications of what the artist was supposed to draw.” That same year Leaf published Lo, the Poor Indian under the pseudonym Mun, but tended to leave it out when recounting his career. Leaf’s most lasting recognition was for writing The Story of Ferdinand, published in 1936 and illustrated by his friend Robert Lawson. Leaf wrote Ferdinand for Lawson, who had been disappointed with his lack of creative freedom as an illustrator. In 1938, Disney’s short-film animated adaptation “Ferdinand the Bull” was released to enormous fanfare and merchandising opportunities; Leaf was known to wryly comment that the hit movie made Leaf, Lawson, and their publisher Viking Press a grand total of $800 split three ways. Another big hit came in 1937 when Leaf collaborated with Ludwig Bemelmans, best known for writing and illustrating Madeleine (1939) and its sequels, on the book Noodle, inspired by Hendrik Van Loon’s dachshund. Although Leaf is best remembered as an author of children’s books, much of his life was spent working for the United States government. Leaf enlisted in the Army in 1942 and collaborated with Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss) on a War Department health pamphlet on malaria, “This Is Ann,” although neither Leaf nor Geisel were credited. After leaving the Army in 1946, Leaf returned to the State Department as a Specialist in 1960, traveling with his wife on Foreign Service lecture tours throughout Europe and Asia. Many of his children’s books of this period were directed towards explaining (and fighting) Communism and promoting world peace. Throughout his career, Leaf was highly regarded for his “chalk talks” to schoolchildren both in his home in Andover and around the world. Although he is perhaps most well- known for his collaborations with Lawson, Leaf was a prolific illustrator of what he called his “stick figures.” He acknowledged that “I can’t draw and I never said I could. I think I am equal to a five-year- old, if he did not go to a progressive school.” Leaf published more than fifty books, most as author and illustrator, and many remain in print and widely read today. Bibliography: Children’s Literature Review, vol. 25. Leaf, Munro. “Just for Fun.” Publishers Weekly Volume 130: 1975. Something About the Author, vol. 20. - Page 5 - Munro Leaf papers, 1918-1986 FLP.RBD.LEAF Scope and Contents note This collection contains the literary papers of author and illustrator Munro Leaf. Fifty-eight titles (both published and unpublished) are represented, most notably manuscript drafts and illustrations from Leaf’s long-running Can Be Fun series, the original handwritten draft of The Story of Ferdinand (1936), an early draft of Noodle (1937), and a large pastel drawing of Noodle by the book’s illustrator, Ludwig Bemelmans, inscribed to Munro and Margaret Leaf. Also of interest are Leaf’s Watchbird cartoons and related materials, serialized in the Ladies' Home Journal and published in six compilations, and materials from his time in the Army during World War II and as a specialist for the United States Information Agency and Foreign Service. The collection dates between 1918 and 1983 (bulk 1936-1976) and includes audiotapes, blueline proofs, books, correspondence, clippings, drafts, a filmstrip, galley proofs, government memoranda, illustrations (primarily in graphite and pen and ink, but also in colored pencil, gouache, marker, and pastel), typescripts, photographs, promotional materials, and a scrapbook from one of Leaf’s lecture tours. There is also a variety of unusual merchandise ephemera from the Walt Disney adaptation “Ferdinand the Bull” (1938), including a charm bracelet, decorative buttons, and quilting squares. Arrangement note This collection is arranged in seven series: I. Articles, essays, and speeches; II. Book manuscripts and illustrations; III. Clippings, reprints, and scrapbook; IV. Correspondence; V. Promotional materials, photographs, and ephemera; VI. Published volumes; VII. U.S. Army and Foreign Service work. The first series is arranged alphabetically by folder title. The second series includes forty-four subseries, arranged alphabetically by title. Within it, "The Story of Ferdinand" includes all materials, regardless of format, related to the book and its adaptations. This arrangement most closely approximates Leaf's original order. The third series includes three subseries: i. Clippings; ii. “Lecture Tour” scrapbook; iii. Reprints. The subseries for the scrapbook preserves Munro Leaf’s original order, while the remaining subseries are arranged chronologically. The fourth

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